Akuvox App Calling and Remote Unlock Guide
Akuvox App Workflow

When app calling is configured well, the user can answer a visitor from a phone, see who is at the entry, and in some designs unlock the door or gate remotely. That is attractive for homes, rental properties, holiday homes, offices, and some apartment scenarios. It is also the sort of feature that can disappoint badly if the network, phone permissions, or cloud setup are treated casually.
Where app calling is most useful
- Homes where the owner is often in the yard, the garage, or away from the front door
- Front gates where the site wants visitor contact before committing to a release
- Rental or managed properties where a local answer point is not always staffed
- Offices where a manager may need occasional after-hours answer capability
Where app-only design is weaker
- Homes with children or older residents who need a fixed answer point
- Reception entries that really need a receptionist or admin desk to manage visitors
- Apartment and body corporate sites where resident expectations vary
- Critical or high-traffic sites that should not rely on one staff member seeing a mobile notification every time
Situation: front gate on a semi-rural home
Solution used: App calling was included because the owners are often away from the house entry point, but a fixed indoor answer station was also kept.
Why this was chosen: The owners wanted convenience, but they did not want every gate interaction to depend entirely on their phones being available.
Installation notes: Remote release was only configured after the gate interface, user permissions, and phone setup were tested properly.
Situation: small office with occasional after-hours deliveries
Solution used: The office used a reception monitor during business hours and app users for selected staff after hours.
Why this was chosen: It kept normal visitor handling professional during the day while still allowing limited flexibility later.
Installation notes: The handover included user setup, phone notification testing, and a clear rule about who was allowed to trigger remote release.
What affects reliability
| Factor | What it changes |
|---|---|
| Internet path | If the site internet is poor or unstable, app answering and remote viewing may suffer. |
| Phone permissions | Muted notifications, battery restrictions, or revoked app permissions can break the user experience. |
| Firmware and cloud setup | Incorrect setup can make a capable system look unreliable. |
| User administration | Multi-user sites need a clear onboarding and offboarding process for app accounts. |
Good practice with remote unlock
Remote unlock should be designed carefully. A front gate on a home, a managed property, and a commercial tenancy all carry different risk. The site should decide who can unlock, from where, and in what situations. On a busier or more sensitive site, a fixed answer point or management station is often still the better primary control.
Relevant links
FAQs
Can Akuvox call a mobile phone app?
Yes, depending on the chosen system path, cloud or SmartPlus setup, device licensing, and network configuration.
Can I unlock the door or gate from the app?
Often yes, provided the release path is designed properly and the site is comfortable with remote unlock as part of its workflow.
Is app calling enough on its own?
Not always. Many homes, offices, and apartment sites still benefit from a monitor or fixed answer point as a backup or as the primary answering method.
What affects app reliability?
Internet quality, phone notification settings, firmware, cloud service availability, app permissions, and correct intercom configuration can all affect the experience.
Should a critical site rely only on app unlock?
Usually not. More critical or busy sites often need a more complete design with monitors, reception answer points, or management stations.
Need help choosing the right Akuvox path?
Send us a photo of the entry, the lock area, any indoor monitor, and any existing intercom cable or cabinet. That usually tells us whether the job suits a simple IP door station, a proper monitor-based system, or a 2-wire retrofit using equipment such as the R20A-2, R20K-2, C313W-2, NS-2, and NC-2.
















